Discourse analysis


What makes texts difficult?


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Discourse analysis HANDBOOK

What makes texts difficult?
Read the following text. What do you find difficult about it?
Police dog sacked after biting the innocent man


Write down the easier way of understanding the article. E.g
The dog is from Switzerland and it has bitten the man in the leg.....
Discuss how grammar helps you to reveal the meaning
the man... had been taken to the hospital
Above discussed text lead you to an idea that learning a language is more than the learning of its GRAMMAR, VOCABULARY AND PRONUNCIATION. And that the ability to handle texts does not necessarily result from the ability simply to read and produce sentences. Over a hundred years ago, a leading writer on second language learning, Henry Sweet, had this to say: 'When the sounds of a language have once been mastered, the main foundation of its study will be connected texts.'7 Not words, nor sentences, note, but connected texts. Sweet added that 'it is only in connected texts that the language itself can be given with each word in a natural and adequate context'.
Activity 3 Unpacking the sentence
Read the small extract of a poem. Do you think it is a text?
How many words
How many clauses
How many sentences
How many parts of speech
Are they simple or compound
How many letter of an alfabet doest it have
Have you forgotten the way to my hut
Every evening I wait the sound of your footsteps
But you do not appear
The text shows typical distribution between Grammar words (function words) and content words
Function words – have, to, not. of
Content words- forgotten, way, footsteps, hut
Find out examples of part of speech
Noun-e.g hut
Verbs-
Pronoun
Preposition-
Auxilary verbs
Past participle
Conjunction
Adverb
Determiner
Finite verbs
If you find example it is clear all those words are organized into common phrasal combination in English
Could you name noun phrase – my hut ...
Verb phrase-
Prepositional phrase
These words and groups of words in turn realize the main functions typically found in combination ih sentences, such as subjects (I), objects (the way to my hut), verbs (appear) and adverbials (every evening). The three clauses each demonstrate three common verb patterns, respectively: verb + object (i.e a transitive verb pattern); verb + preposition (for) + object; and a verb with no object (ie an intransitive verb). As well as the basic statement form of subject + verb (I wait...) there is an example each of (1) the inversion of subject and verb to make questions (Have you forgotten..?) and (2) the use of a 'dummy operator' + not to form negative statements (you do not appear). The way English verbs are marked for tense and aspect is also exemplified, with two verbs in the present tense unmarked for aspect (wait, appear) and one example of a present perfect construction (have. ..forgotten). Finally, at the level of connected discourse, the conjunction but connects the two parts of the second sentence, signalling that what follows contrasts in some way with what went before. And the repetition of you across the two sentences helps connect them.
This rather detailed analysis of one very short text is simply intended to demonstrate how much 'language' there is in a text and, therefore, how much potential texts have for the purposes of exemplifying features of language - of phonology, orthography (ie the writing system), vocabulary, grammar and discourse - for teaching purposes.

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